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Monday, December 14 Play today's show | How to listen Barber in Rome (part 2) On today's date in 1936, just one day after the premiere of his Symphony No. 1, the young American composer Samuel Barber attended the first performance of his String Quartet No. 1. Both premieres took place in Rome, where Barber was enjoying the benefits of the Prix de Rome, which included a two-year residency at the American Academy in the "Eternal City." Barber found Europe a congenial place to compose, finding inspiration in both the art and the important musical personalities he encountered there. Even so, he found writing a string quartet hard going: "I have started a new quartet," he writes in one letter, "but how difficult it is. It seems to me that because we have so assiduously forced our personalities on Music -- on Music, who never asked for them! -- that we have lost elegance, and if we cannot recapture elegance, the quartet form has escaped us forever." It's perhaps debatable whether Barber recaptured "elegance" in his new quartet, but "eloquence" is another matter: The new quartet's slow adagio was described as being "deeply felt and written with economy, resourcefulness and distinction" by one critic after a New York performance the following year. Barber later recast this movement for full string orchestra, and, as Barber's "Adagio for Strings," it�s become one of the best-loved pieces of modern American music. During the Second World War, it was adopted as a kind of unofficial anthem of mourning, and was played for the funeral of America's great wartime President, Franklin D. Roosevelt. | Music Played on Today's Program: Additional Information: About the Program Support Composers Datebook Your support makes our online services possible. Contribute Now. | |||||||
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Composers Datebook for December 14, 2009
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